Explore ​Victorian London at the Jack the Ripper Museum

​The museum is a dedicated to the history of the East London in the 1880s, providing a serious examination of the crimes of Jack the Ripper within the social context of the period. For the first time it tells the story of the man known as 'Jack the Ripper' from the perspective of six of the women who were his victims.

MUSEUM ADDRESS:12 CABLE STREET, LONDON, E1 8JGTel: 020 7488 9811

MUSEUM WALK

The official Jack the Ripper Museum Walk is unique in that it connects the key sites on the ground to those that are recreated inside the museum. By taking the Official tour and visiting the Jack the Ripper museum you will get the full story of Jack the Ripper and an experience like no other. Don’t leave London without doing our tour!​ Daily at 3pm from Traders Gate Gift SHop at Tower Hill Station.

THE MUSEUM

Six incredible floors recreate scenes from the time. The murder scene in Mitre Square, a gentleman's sitting room (would Jacks' have looked like this), the Whitechapel police station, Mary Jane Kelly's bedroom, the mortuary and much, much more.

THE HISTORY

In 1888, Jack the Ripper committed a series of murders in the east end of London that shocked the world. The killings spawned hundreds of theories, books and films, each trying to solve the crimes which, to this day, remain a mystery.